Hypothesis: Given
that kale is a high nitrogen feeder, being interplanted with Fava beans
should increase the kale's yield. Given that the extra nitrogen that
beans generate stays in the soil for next year(s) rather than being
immediately removed by the beans, I predict that the fava bean
production will
not be affected positively or adversely by being interplanted with kale
Materials:
| Optimum |
What
was had |
|
-3 equal plots of garden area |
-2 equal plots of garden area |
|
-fava beans to fill 2 of the areas |
-fava beans filling 1 plot |
|
-kale seeds to fill 2 of the areas
|
-kale seed filling 1 1/2 plots |
| -normal garden tools |
-normal garden tools |
Method: (To reproduce with
Optimum control rather than with what was had)
1.Plant 2 plots with kale seed (single year variety).
2.Plant the empty plot & one of the kale plots with
Fava beans
3.Keep well watered until beans start to flower, then keep
watering but less.
4.Take detailed notes as to the development of each plot
(ie. growth speeds etc.)
5.Pick kale until end of plant's normal lifespan (can vary
considerably in between plants), take notes.
6.Pick beans until beans finish their season. Take
detailed notes of average size, total production in each plot etc..
Results: Kale
bore about 1 1/2X in the bean/kale plot as in the no-bean plot. Beans
in the bean/kale plot bore the same as in the no-kale plot.
Conclusion: The
kale in the bean plot grew better and more than the plain kale plot and
since the kale had no observable negative effect on the beans it is a
good companion planting. It is not a great companion planting, since to
be called that, both plants would have to benefit.